I have a complex model that is basically a short tube with an angled cut in it.
The cut ends are then coiled inside.
I need to bevel the outer edge.
I have tried to chamfer it but it is not nearly as sharp as I need it to be.
I also tried to just select all the outside polys and scale them down (that should give me a great bevel), but I can't figure out how to scale them uniformly based on their mesh position.. Right now they all scale together, meaning the polys on the cut scale IN toward each other..
Hopefully there is a better way to do this than manually?
You could also simply extrude the faces you wish to chamfer just a little bit and then apply the chamfer.
Thanks guys.
The problem is, I need much more of a 'bevel' than a 'chamfer'..
See attached- I just grabbed the lower inside edge and pulled it down. I need this much of bevel.
Here is the other problem- the INSIDE section should be the extents of the model (this is for a 3D print), I really need the OUTSIDE beveled inward/smaller..
I would have created the shape as I needed it before warping it, but it warps the bevels out of shape.
Instead of using bevel you could extrude and then remove the unwanted edge and rotate (if required) as shown below.
Those solutions work great, except I can't extrude or bevel OUTWARD and make the model any taller than it already is.
The outside edge needs to bevel in/smaller, not the inside edge extruding/beveling out/larger.
I will look at removing rows of edges/verts and see if that works.
I thought adding a taper at the very beginning would work, but the model still distorts too much at the points.
Bevel and chamfer are considered some times the same.
But in Max
It seems that chamfer is what you are looking for, but I quite don't understand you.
In any case I have already sent you an example of chamfer. You design how looks. My examples were simply basic variations:
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